some love for “monsters”

From reviewer and SF columnist, Rich Horton:

Anthologies from Elsewhere, 2010

I’ve already covered 5 anthologies each from the UK and Australia, but I saw two more from outside the US. These were: Philippine Speculative Fiction 5, edited by Nikki Alfar and Vincent Michael Simbulan (Philippines); and Tesseracts 14, edited by John Robert Colombo and Brett Alexander Savory (Canada).

The two books between them contained 43 new stories: 5 novelettes and 38 short stories (three short-short), for a total of just over 200,000 words of new short fiction. 19 of the stories were by women (44%), and 18 were SF (42%).

Highlights from Philippine Speculative Fiction 5 include Joseph Anthony Montecillo’s “New Toy”, Andrew Drilon’s “A Game of Quam”, Eliza Victoria’s “Monsters”, and Dean Francis Alfar’s “Strange Weather”. From Tesseracts 14, I liked L. L. Hannett’s “Soil from my Fingers”, Claude Lalumiere’s “Vermilion Dreams: The Complete Works of Bram Jameson”, and Daniel Sernine’s “Nights in White Linen”.

Rich Horton writes regular columns for Locus (on short science fiction) and Black Gate (on the history of SF), and further reviews for Fantasy Magazine, SF Site, and other publications.

PSF V is still available in bookstores. ;)

psf 6 book launch has a date!

Philippine Speculative Fiction Vol. 6 will be launched on May 28th, a Saturday, 5 pm, at the U-View Theater, Fully Booked, at the Fort. I have a story here. See you at the launch! :)

Beach tomorrow, then home on Friday. I’ll be offline till Easter. My mother’s been pestering me to take home my Free Press copy with “Reunion” published in it, so yeah I should put that on the to-do list. (I also have awesome news involving that story, but I’ll keep that under wraps for now, tee hee.)

Stay safe, you guys. Spend time with your loved ones.

a word from the philippines free press

If you’re a writer, the world inside your head can be as chaotic as you want, but at the end of day, you’ll still need  order and process. I’m happy to read this.

Source.

Notice to Contributors to the Philippines Free Press Literary Section:

The Philippines Free Press is streamlining submissions to the magazine’s literary section. In this light, hereunder are updated guidelines that we hope would address most contributors’ common concerns.

1. Contributors are kindly advised to submit one short story or a maximum of two poems to the following centralized email address: literary@philippinesfreepress.com.ph.

Do indicate your contact info (landline/mobile) for faster advisory from the literary editor if and when the work will be published. The editorial board will only contact (via email notification) contributors whose respective works have been accepted for publication. Sending rejection letters is not a practice of the magazine.

2. Submission by regular mail or post is not encouraged. Contributors are advised to submit no more than twice per year, and submissions should not be a combination of poetry and fiction. All entries must be written in English. Any contributor who is not based in the Philippines but whose work has been published is automatically disqualified from the annual awards.

3. Following up of payment should be done a month after a contributor’s work has been published. The members of the Editorial Board have agreed that such inquiries should be made solely by email (via the abovementioned address) and not by calling the Free Press landlines. Please indicate the title of your work and in which issue of the Free Press it has been printed. This is to facilitate the faster issuance of your check payment by the magazine’s Accounting department.

4. The FP Literary awards will be held toward the end of August 2011, and covers all entries published during the preceding year (2010-11).

philippine speculative fiction 6 cover revealed

Editors Kate Osias and Nikki Alfar sent an e-mail apologizing for the delay, but the book should be out soon. I think the cover is amazing. Stay tuned.

plug it baby

The Kritika Kultura Anthology of New Philippine Writing in English is now live. Edited by Mark Anthony Cayanan, Conchitina Cruz, and Adam David and featuring work by Arbeen Acuña, Liana Barcia, Maria Pia V. Benosa, Lawrence Bernabe, Mae Cacanindin, Catherine Candano, Joseph Casimiro, Marrian Pio Roda Ching, Jose V. Clutario, Isabela Cuerva, Paul S. de Guzman, Jun De La Rosa, Dana Lee F. Delgado, Daryll Delgado, Arlynn Despi, Katrina C. Elauria, Francis Murillo Emralino, Rey Escobar, Apo Española, EJ C. Galang, J. Pilapil Jacobo, Florianne Jimenez, Phillip Kimpo Jr., Pauline Lacanilao, Christine V. Lao, Isabelle Lau, Petra Magno, Johnina Martha Marfa, John Revo Ocampo, Anna Oposa, Zosimo Quibilan, Jr., Carlos Quijon, Jr., Eris Ramos, Ramon Niño T. Raquid, Kristine Reynaldo, Agustin Martin G. Rodriguez, Sandra Nicole Roldan, Chiles Samaniego, Katrina Stuart Santiago, Oscar Tantoco Serquiña, Jr., Vincenz Serrano, Christian Tablazon, Alyza Taguilaso, Rapunzel Tomacder, Eileen F. Tupaz, and Vyxz Vasquez. Exquisite Corpses by DJ Legaspi, Mervin Malonzo, and Josel Nicolas.

I have a poem in it called “Maps“.

From the introduction:

The decision to affix the term new to this anthology derives from the conviction that there are enough surprising behaviors in language present in recent Philippine writing in English to merit a shorthand evaluation that is nothing less than a brazen pronouncement. New, in this case, is meant to careen beyond literal description, although it performs this practical function: the authors in this anthology are young in their writing lives, having published only one book, if at all, and quite a number of the contributors count this publication as their first. This common feature, while pertinent, is not the impetus for the anthology—the most youth does is promise imaginative energy, not assure it, and to host a friendly inventory of potential among those whose early stages of literary production coincide seems simply superfluous, if not vapidly premature, the new reduced to disclaimer rather than declaration. In calling itself new, this anthology holds itself responsible for the literary spectrum it constructs and asserts its position within. It directly engages art’s unwavering fixation with originality—or its more pragmatic twin, reinvention—amid conditions that more and more aggressively eliminate their possibility. It situates itself in conversation with various traditions and whatever its existence renders old, mindful of the fluctuating degrees to which these are inscribed within the works that succeed them. It presumes a pitch peculiar enough to withstand, even temper, the cacophony of existing literature, and consequently, compelling enough to command attention.

My thanks to the editors.

*

I finally had time to read the Stone Telling Whimsy issue. Absolutely loved Catherynne Valente’s “The Secret of Being a Cowboy“, read brilliantly – just brilliantly! – by S.J. Tucker. You must listen to it!

The Roundtable is always a treat, made even more special in this issue by a surprise bonus poem. :) Do read the discussion and Jo Walton’s “Sappho Beyond Hades”.

I also loved the art Rose paired with the pieces. The art paired with “The Weatherkeeper’s Diary” was perfect. I’d like to have that hanging in my room.

*

Apparently, I also made an impression. Author Amal El-Mohtar said she was “very struck” by my poem, “Sodom Gomorrah”. Thank you! :)

Tin Lao (who told me about Amal’s review) also said she loved this poem, as well as “Maps”. Thanks! (Do read her poem, “The Difference Between Abundance and Grace“. The fallen and the bruised on the fragrant lawn and a woman who chooses and chooses what is worth saving.)

I can’t wait to sit down and read the entire KK anthology.

stone telling 3 is here!

The Stone Telling Whimsy issue, edited by Rose Lemberg, contains a roundtable discussion led by Julia Rios, nonfiction articles by Deborah Brannon and Nin Harris, and poetry by Jo Walton, Catherynne Valente, Emily Jiang, Sonya Taaffe, Michael R. Fosburg, Caitlyn Paxson, Sara Saab, Susan Rooke, William Doreski, Benjamin Cartwright, Mary Turzillo, and moi. :)

From the introduction:

In “Whimsy” we tilt sideways to look at the world askew – and all kinds of things fall out of the pockets. There’s cloud skeins and language and landscape. There’s salt, and portraiture in mushrooms, and a rice cooker. There’s death, and photosynthesizing cats, and a six shooter called Witty Rejoinder. Boundary-crossing is a serious business.

This issue leaves a trail of hazelnuts. I think it leads to a place unafraid of saying strange true things. New things. Brain-popping things. We flail around for a voice and find pomegranates. We speak of happiness and pain and who we are and how we mesh, but we are not a crowd of lookalikes. Some of us love mythpunk, others disavow genre definitions. We argue, and come up with new stuff. Here- however you define it – here, in this sort of speculative, sort of literary, always in-between liminal space we don’t have to be concerned with conforming, complying, fitting in, faithfully following in the steps. These steps are our own steps. I hope you find what we do here meaningful – and fun.

A few editorial announcements:

Issue 4 will be guest-edited by Shweta Narayan and J. C. Runolfson. Please send them stuff!

My future plans include an International Mythic issue (Stone Telling 5), and a Science and Science Fiction Issue (Stone Telling 6). More information soon!

Congratulations to Stone Telling 1 and 2 poets who were nominated for the Rhysling Award:

Mary Alexandra Agner, “Tertiary” (issue 2)
Tara Barnett, “Star Reservation” (issue 1)
Amal El Mohtar, “The Winter Tree” (issue 2)
Samantha Henderson, “The Gabriel Hound” (issue 1)
Sonya Taafe, “Domovoi, I Came Back” (issue 1)

And finally, I’d like to welcome the newest addition to the Stone Telling team. Jennifer Smith is our tireless proofreader and occasional html wrangler.

Happy reading!
Rose Lemberg, editor

In “Whimsy” we tilt sideways to look at the world askew – and all kinds of things fall out of the pockets. There’s cloud skeins and language and landscape. There’s salt, and portraiture in mushrooms, and a rice cooker. There’s death, and photosynthesizing cats, and a six shooter called Witty Rejoinder. Boundary-crossing is a serious business.This issue leaves a trail of hazelnuts. I think it leads to a place unafraid of saying strange true things. New things. Brain-popping things. We flail around for a voice and find pomegranates. We speak of happiness and pain and who we are and how we mesh, but we are not a crowd of lookalikes. Some of us love mythpunk, others disavow genre definitions. We argue, and come up with new stuff. Here- however you define it – here, in this sort of speculative, sort of literary, always in-between liminal space we don’t have to be concerned with conforming, complying, fitting in, faithfully following in the steps. These steps are our own steps. I hope you find what we do here meaningful – and fun.

A few editorial announcements:

Issue 4 will be guest-edited by Shweta Narayan and J. C. Runolfson. Please send them stuff!

My future plans include an International Mythic issue (Stone Telling 5), and a Science and Science Fiction Issue (Stone Telling 6). More information soon!

Congratulations to Stone Telling 1 and 2 poets who were nominated for the Rhysling Award:

Mary Alexandra Agner, “Tertiary” (issue 2)
Tara Barnett, “Star Reservation” (issue 1)
Amal El Mohtar, “The Winter Tree” (issue 2)
Samantha Henderson, “The Gabriel Hound” (issue 1)
Sonya Taafe, “Domovoi, I Came Back” (issue 1)

And finally, I’d like to welcome the newest addition to the Stone Telling team. Jennifer Smith is our tireless proofreader and occasional html wrangler.

Happy reading!
Rose Lemberg, editor